INDEPENDENT NEWS

PressPatron: Now you can support my site

Published: Thu 6 Apr 2017 07:06 PM
You may have spotted the PressPatron banner at the top of this page. It invites you to be a supporter. There's also a button to the right of this text.
They are both part of my PressPatron campaign. It's a new way of crowd-funding websites.
I'm one of the first journalist-bloggers in New Zealand to use PressPatron. That puts me in good company. Russell Brown at Public Address got there first. Brown's campaign has been running for about a month.
PressPatron is new, so there may be bugs in the system. Please be patient.
Soon you'll see PressPatron banners in a lot more places.
Newsroom and Scoop are onboard. So is Sciblogs, E-Tangeta and TheatreReview. We're all small, independent New Zealand online publishers.
What is PressPatron?
PressPatron is a way for readers like you to support the media you use. It is voluntary and painless. You get to set the amount you contribute. You can make a one-off payment or commit to a series of payments over time.
Most of all, PressPatron is not a pay wall. The stories on this site will stay free. You don't have to pay a cent. The idea is that you're supporting a website, not buying anything.
For now PressPatron is a New Zealand service. The founder, Alex Clark in Wellington, plans to offer it to overseas publishers. I've been talking to Alex about the idea for some time now and feel like I'm on the ground floor of something important.
One of the things I like most is that PressPatron doesn't get in the way. If you don't like seeing the banner, you can click it off. The sidebar button will stay, but it's not offensive or distracting.
What will I do with the PressPatron money?
This site was never designed to by a source of income. It's not my job. But it does cost money to run and it costs money to cover New Zealand technology.
So my first goal is to collect enough money so this site pays for itself.
Running this site isn't expensive. There are managed web host fees and a handful of licences and subscriptions for services.
I'm a strong believer in paying people for work. That means paying for things like WordPress plug-ins, even when contributions are voluntary.
Around $500 will cover all my costs.
More, better local technology reporting
Any money I collect over that amount will go towards my journalism expenses. Among other things that means covering conferences and getting to industry events that might not otherwise get the attention they deserve.
InternetNZ's NetHui is one example.
Open Source Open Society is another candidate. It would be good to get to Multicore World, ITX and the Linux AU conference when it is in New Zealand.
Some Commerce Commission conferences could do with a reporter watching what goes on. I'd also like to get to some out-of-town press conferences.
Tuanz events are useful. In my experience other smaller, narrow focus trade events can be valuable. I learned much from going to ISPANZ a year or so ago.
I'll use any money raised money to pay for travel, accommodation and meals. Nothing fancy. At this stage PressPatron is not going to provide my income. That will continue to come from paying journalism and writing jobs.
PressPatron goals
First I want to make $500 to cover site costs.
If I reach a total $1500 I'll be able to attend two out-of-town conferences that I wouldn't otherwise get to.
A further $1500 means I'll be able to attend all the big local scheduled events without needing to pick favourites1.
Any money raised over $3500 will be spent traveling outside of Auckland to get a wider perspective on technology. It means driving or flying out-of-town to chat to more people, more often.
If PressPatron takes off I'd like to spend some money on better photography.
Although that depends on my availability and the amount of paid work I've got at the time. Sometimes conferences clash with publishing projects.
Digitl
New Zealand technology news
Bill Bennett publishes technology news and features that are directly relevant to New Zealand readers.
Covering enterprise and small business computing, start-ups, listed companies, the technology channel and devices. Bennett's main focus is on New Zealand innovation.
Bill Bennett stories are republished on Geekzone and Scoop.
Stories published on this site are available to publishers for a fixed fee or a monthly subscription.
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